Vernon MP calls Liberal buyback 'biggest political frauds in Canadian history'
Scott Anderson is continuing his opposition to the Liberal government's ban of more than 1,500 models of firearm calling it "one of the biggest political frauds in Canadian history."
In his run for federal political office in April 2025,
Anderson told Castanet the gun ban was one of the top issues for the Vernon-Lake Country-Monashee riding candidate.
"I would like to see them stop. I think that firearms hurt people only when they're used by bad people. I collect firearms, and my firearms are in my basement, and they will hurt nobody,” Anderson said at the time.
Anderson went on to win the riding and continues to be vocal about the gun buyback and the $1-billion spent on it so far.
“This ridiculous firearm confiscation is one of the biggest political frauds in Canadian history,” Anderson posted on his Facebook page this week. “The stated goal is safety, which right out of the gate renders it useless, since police forces, firearms experts, CBSA and stark reality all make it quite clear that confiscating legally owned and lawfully stored firearms saves no one."
“Crime is committed by criminals, not firearms. Confiscating legal firearms because they can be dangerous and people don't 'need' them is like confiscating downhill skis because they can be dangerous and no one 'needs' them. In fact more people are hurt in our mountains by skis than by firearms.”
The government banned the use, sale and importation of the "assault-style" weapons in May 2020, signalling they considered them fit only for the battlefield, not for hunting or sport shooting.
The move was generally applauded by gun control advocates as a first step toward removing firearms used in mass shootings from circulation.
In October 2023, a Federal Court judge dismissed a request to strike down the ban as unlawful and beyond the scope of the powers delegated to the federal cabinet.
A not-for-profit advocacy organization, firearm owners, businesses, hunters and recreational and sport shooters appealed the ruling.
In April 2025, the Federal Court of Appeal rejected that challenge, saying the Federal Court delivered "thorough and persuasive" reasons.
The Supreme Court of Canada will now hear a
challenge of the ban.
Scott Anderson is continuing his opposition to the Liberal government's ban on more than 1,500 firearms models and variants. In his run for federal political office in April 2025, Anderson told Cas
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